Margaret (Peg) Kern has been fulfilling her clients’ travel dreams since 2004 when she joined The International Kitchen as a tour coordinator after leaving academia. She has been part owner of The International Kitchen since 2015, and assumed primary ownership in 2024. In her time as president of TIK, Peg has expanded the company to include more trips, new destinations, custom itineraries, and a robust food and travel blog.

Raised in a small town in Ohio, Peg always wanted to see the world. She started doing so by heading to New York City for college, where she graduated cum laude from Columbia University. One of the highlights of college for her was a junior year spent in Rome, Italy, studying Italian literature and art at the University of Rome la Sapienza. Her interest in travel blossomed into an intense and enduring love for Italy.

After returning to Rome for a year (and enjoying work in a couple of Roman
eateries), she headed to Chicago for graduate school. Peg received her M.A. and Ph.D. in Italian literature from the University of Chicago, graduating with honors, where she then taught for two years as part of the Master of Arts Program in the Humanities.

By 2004 Peg was ready to leave academia behind to pursue other interests, and when she saw an ad for a boutique tour company that specialized in food-themed tours, she jumped at the chance to the join the team. That company was The International Kitchen, one of the premier providers of culinary vacations and food-themed travel since 1994.

Having lived for several years in Italy during the preceding decade, Peg was particularly keen to introduce travelers to the authentic Italy she knew and loved, but she quickly expanded her areas of expertise to include the rest of Europe, most notably France and Spain. She stepped back from the company for a few years to start a family but came back full force in 2015 when she assumed co-ownership of the business. She has instilled the travel bug in her sons and enjoys traveling with the whole family to check out cooking classes and food tours in destinations around the world.

Peg’s experience in traveling and living in Europe has made her well suited to plan trips for her culinary travelers, and she couples that with years of experience in restaurants and the food service industry. Although her work in the food industry began inauspiciously in high school at the local McDonald’s, she has worked at restaurants and bars in the US and Rome, and worked as a private chef on Long Island.

A consummate foodie, Peg enjoys cooking for her family, entertaining friends at lavish dinner parties, and judging her sons’ home-cooking competitions. Some of her favorite food activities include perfecting her bone broth, making bread from her 30-year old Italian Mother yeast, and exploring the many ethnic cuisines so wonderfully available in Chicago.

Peg’s favorite destination remains Italy, including the regions of Lazio, Sardinia, Campania, Tuscany, Umbria, Sicily, Abruzzo, Lombardy, the Veneto, and Piedmont – to name a few.

Her philosophy when it comes to writing about food and travel is to share what she knows and to explore what she loves.


Posted

April 6, 2015

By Peg Kern

Pasquetta: An Italian Holiday

Filed Under  Destination Features, Special Occasions

What is pasquetta? "Pasquetta," is literally "little Easter," but is taken to mean Easter Monday. Sometimes called "il lunedì dell'angelo" ("Monday of the angel") for the biblical meeting of the women and the angel outside Jesus's empty tomb, there is little of a religious nature in how the day is celebrated in today's Italy . Pasquetta is historically a day for the countryside: after the church celebrations and pomp of… Read
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Posted

April 3, 2015

By Peg Kern

Tortellini Recipe from our Italy Cooking Vacations

Filed Under  Food History, Recipes

Emilia Romagna is known for an incredible range of gastronomical treats, but it's the tortellini that has one of the best origin stories around. As the story goes, the shape of the tortellini was inspired by none other the Venus, the goddess of love, and the shape of her navel. Today, the tortellini is an incredibly important part of family meals, and every family has their own version of the… Read
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Posted

March 27, 2015

By Peg Kern

Roman Recipe for Baccalà e Puntarelle (Salt Cod and Chicory)

Filed Under  Food History, Kitchen Tips, Recipes

Springtime (and Lent in particular) to me means "Filetti di Baccalà e insalata di puntarelle," or fried cod fillets with Roman chicory salad. Many were the Fridays I went with friends in Rome to the famed baccalà restaurant near the Church of Santa Barbara, just off the Via del Governo Vecchio. Inexpensive, delicious, a favorite of locals, the baccalà fillets are served wrapped in paper, and the puntarelle are spicy… Read
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Posted

March 23, 2015

By Peg Kern

What to See In Rome: Top 15 Places to Visit in 2025

Filed Under  Destination Features, Travel Tips, Travel Videos

Everyone has a favorite city. Mine is Rome, probably because it was the first place I lived in Italy, my first exposure to Europe, the placed that formed the backdrop to my coming of age back in my twenties. Rome doesn't need a sales pitch. But I am frequently asked what to see in Rome, what are the Rome landmarks not to miss, and what are my favorite places to… Read
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Posted

March 11, 2015

By Peg Kern

Italian Recipe for Puglia-Style Fava Beans with Wild Chicory

Filed Under  Kitchen Tips, Recipes

For today's blog we're featuring a delicious recipe from Puglia. Puglia is one of the most fascinating regions of Italy, and one of its main food producers, making it the perfect destination for a cooking vacation with The International Kitchen! The dish, Fava Beans with Chicory, is a traditional vegetarian dish, which makes it ideal for this week's celebration of fruit and vegetable markets (as well as a wonderful introduction… Read
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Posted

March 2, 2015

By Peg Kern

Seafood Salad with Vietnamese Herbs

Filed Under  Destination Features, Recipes

The gastronomy of Vietnam is packed with complex flavors. But as this recipe demonstrates, the food here places a big emphasis on fresh vegetables, herbs, as well as seafood. This seafood salad with Vietnamese Herbs comes from the chefs of the Red Bridge cooking school, where one of your three cooking classes takes place during our Cooking and Culture in Southeast Asia trip. The school itself is a fascinating place;… Read
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Posted

February 25, 2015

By Peg Kern

A Sicilian Dinner Party with Wine Pairing

Filed Under  Destination Features, Kitchen Tips, Special Occasions, Wines & Spirits

At The International Kitchen we like to say "If you haven't been to Sicily, you haven't been to Italy." Why? What makes it so unique in our minds, and so worth visiting? Part of it is the authenticity. Sicily feels Italian in a way that much of the mainland does not: the increasing homogeneity of a global world brings us all closer, but it can also soften the edges of… Read
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Posted

February 20, 2015

By Peg Kern

Mexican Rice: A Surprisingly Versatile Ingredient & Horchata Recipe

Filed Under  Food History, Recipes

In the U.S., you're probably used to a simple side of rice accompanying your main dish at a Mexican-American restaurant, but in reality, rice takes on so much more dimension in Mexican cuisine. In Mexico cooking, the simple grains can be transformed into a variety of colors, flavors, and textures, and they can also be featured as the main ingredient in drinks and dessert. Red, yellow, green, and black are… Read
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Posted

February 18, 2015

By Peg Kern

Wine Pairings for Paella

Filed Under  Food History, Recipes, Wines & Spirits

The Italians have risotto. But in Spain, it's all about paella. The dish originated in the region of Valencia, where it was once the purview of farmers who made it as a one-pot meal over a fire for lunch; it was essentially made with rice and whatever other ingredients the farmers had on hand. Today, however, you will find it throughout Spain, where it has become a sort of national… Read
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Posted

February 11, 2015

By Peg Kern

Ricotta Tart and Prosecco: A Perfect Pairing

Filed Under  Recipes, Wines & Spirits

Prosecco is one of our favorite Italian wines. While it does not carry the same weight or reputation as the great Italian wines, it does not aim to: it is simple, refreshing, and when made properly, a perfectly delightful wine. Learn more about the wines of the Veneto. Like many sparklers, it pairs well with most foods, from Venice's famous "cichetti" appetizers, to cheese, pastas, seafood, and of course desserts.… Read
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